Re: 2.6 proposed module: dasher
- From: Bill Haneman <Bill Haneman Sun COM>
- To: Peter Korn <Peter Korn Sun COM>
- Cc: Murray Cumming Comneon com, gnome-accessibility-list gnome org, release-team gnome org
- Subject: Re: 2.6 proposed module: dasher
- Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2004 19:24:35 +0000
Peter Korn wrote:
Hi Murray, Bill,
If the GNOME accessibility team say that they need it, and that they
plan to integrate it into the whole set of accessibilty tools, then the
release-team is likely to just say "OK, you're the experts". However,
>> as a sanity check, I would like to know that somebody is actually
getting some benefit from it already, so it's not just a theoretical
>> thing.
I don't disagree with anything Bill writes (below), but want to add a
different perspective for consideration.
The GNOME integration may well be strong enough by the time 2.6 ships,
but I think there are still some significant issues to work out to
make that more useful. As a standalone application for entering text
via an alternate interface for people with severe physical
disabilities, it is *very* interesting and the performance numbers
from their studies are quite remarkable. As an assistive technology
that allows a someone with a severe physical disability to completely
control their desktop, I think it has a good ways to go.
So - I have absolutely no objection to it being included with GNOME,
and I can't think of a better place for it to live in the default menu
structure other than in "Accessibility", but I personally would like
to see much more functionality in the roadmap and active development
before I would consider it a real alternate user interface for the
desktop. Until a user can navigate dialog boxes and toolbars and the
like with Dasher, they will be unable to effectively use an
application (navigating menus alone isn't enough).
Dasher allows any and everything that is keyboard-navigable to be
accessed. I was under the impression that recent Dasher versions allow
access to more than just menus; what version did you last test, Peter?
- Bill
Regards,
Peter Korn
Sun Accessibility team
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